Safe roads, reliable journeys, informed travellers M62 J18-20 M1 J28-31 M1 J32-35a M1 J39-42 M6 J10a-13 M3 J2-4a M25 J5-6/7 M25 J23-27 M60 J8-18 M25 J16-23 M1 J25-28 M25 J10-16 M1 J6a-10 M42 J3a-M40 J16 M20 J4-7 M25 J2-3 M25 J27-30 M25 J7-8 M25 J8-10 M62 J25-30 M6 J8-10a M6 J5-8 M1 J10-13 M42 J3a-7 (pilot) M42 J7-9 M6 J4-5 M4 J19-20 and M5 J15-17 8 York Bristol Brighton Exeter Leeds A1M A1M M1 M5 M4 M11 A1M M25 M3 M1 M6 M6 Liverpool Norwich Southampton London Bedford Newcastle Upon Tyne Manchester Nottingham Birmingham Controlled motorway Hard shoulder running All lane running Schemes starting in 2014/15 Dates to be confirmed Schemes under construction and planned completion dates Schemes starting in 2013/14 Schemes open to traffic England’s motorways are getting smart Get smart, know your motorways! © Crown copyright and database rights 2013 Ordnance Survey 100030649 Highways Agency Media Services Dorking S130508 An executive agency of the Department for Transport www.highways.gov.uk/smartmotorways England’s motorways are changing. Many now use a range of new technology to vary speed limits in response to driving conditions. These smart motorways make the hard shoulder available to traffic. This could be permanently or at particularly busy times of the day. These smart motorways are managed by our regional control centres. They use CCTV so that Highways Agency traffic officers can be deployed to incidents if they occur and help to keep traffic moving. This leaflet tells you what to expect and how to use a smart motorway. Where you see the different types of smart motorways